Wheeler v. Gregg

203 P.2d 37, 90 Cal. App. 2d 348, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 984
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1949
DocketCiv. 16444
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 203 P.2d 37 (Wheeler v. Gregg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. Gregg, 203 P.2d 37, 90 Cal. App. 2d 348, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 984 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

Plaintiffs herein, numbering 25 individual and one corporate property owners whose properties Re within 3,000 feet of 115 acres of land owned or leased by defendant Gregg, instituted this action to have declared unconstitutional and void the action of the council of the city of Los Angeles whereby, on October 2, 1946, said council granted to defendant Gregg a variance permit (in reality a conditional use *352 permit under section 12.24 of Ordinance No. 90500) to excavate for the commercial production of rock, sand and gravel in an area of land containing some 105 acres. Plaintiffs alleged that the action was also brought in behalf of the planning commission, park department, playground and recreational department and board of education of defendant city. They also alleged that their action was prosecuted for the benefit of more than one thousand persons living within what plaintiffs described as “the community area,” alleging that “the situation of said agencies is similar to the situation of these named plaintiffs in respect to their own properties,” and that with reference to the aforesaid more than one thousand persons, the enjoyment of their homes within said “community area” and their health and safety “would be substantially, materially, and injuriously affected in kind substantially as would be these named plaintiffs” from defendant Gregg’s operations in the area in question.

By their complaint, plaintiffs sought a decree:

(1) Declaring void a variance permit (really, as stated above, a conditional use permit) granted defendant Gregg by defendant city by which Gregg was authorized to excavate and remove rock, sand and gravel from the permit area;
(2) Enjoining the city from granting any permit for the commercial production of rock, sand and gravel from any lands included within the so-called community area;
(3) Enjoining defendant Gregg from (a) exercising any right, benefit or privilege under the permit granted him by the city, and (b) from conducting any operation for the commercial production of rock, sand and gravel within the so-called community area;
(4) As against defendant Gregg the recovery of actual damages “accrued” to the date of judgment, together with $250,000 punitive damages;
(5) General relief.

- Defendants filed separate answers each denying the material allegations of the complaint. Following trial the court rendered judgment for defendants, but in so doing required defendant Gregg to comply with certain operational conditions imposed by its decree, in addition to the conditions imposed by the city in its permit.

The conditions imposed by defendant city were:

“1. That the applicant (Gregg) construct a 6-foot cyclone type mesh wire fence around the said property, including *353 barbed wire on the top of said fence, providing the Fire Department grants permission for same.
“2. That no permanent plant, building or structure be installed or maintained on said property and that all material excavated be mined by an electrically powered shovel and primary crusher and transported by a conveyor belt system running through a tunnel or tunnels under Glenoaks Boulevard to the plant now operated by applicant, lying southwesterly of said boulevard and processed at said plant.
“3. That a set-back line of 50 feet from all property lines and existing streets be maintained and that slopes of excavations be maintained at one foot to one foot.
“4. That the area between all property lines or street lines and 50 foot set-back be screen planted progressively as excavations proceed.”

To the foregoing conditions the court added the following:

”1. That defendant John D. Gregg shall not conduct any operation for the excavation of rock, sand or gravel from the so-called ‘Critical’ area, as described in the complaint herein, lying northeasterly of Glenoaks Boulevard at any time before 6 :00 o ’clock A.M. of any day, or after 8:00 o ’clock P.M. of any day, excepting that the said defendant John D. Gregg shall not be prohibited from making any reasonable or necessary repairs to equipment in said area during other hours.
‘‘2. That said defendant John D. Gregg house in any primary crusher which is operated in that portion of the so-called ‘Critical’ area lying northeasterly of Glenoaks Boulevard so as to minimize any noise emanating therefrom.
“3. That in connection with any and all drag-line operations on the banks or slopes of any pit excavated by defendant John D. Gregg in that part of the so-called ‘Critical’ area lying northeasterly of Glenoaks Boulevard, that the said defendant John D. Gregg shall cause the banks or slopes of said excavation to be sprinkled with water prior to any such drag-line operations, so as to minimize the possibility of dust from any such operation being carried by the winds beyond the boundaries of said so-called ‘Critical’ area.
“4. That said defendant John D. Gregg, as soon as reasonably practicable and as soon as material and equipment is available, shall complete the construction of the dust collection system in his rock crusher plant located southwesterly of Glenoaks Boulevard, the construction of which system was commenced prior to the commencement of this action.”

*354 With reference to the physical characteristics of the area involved, there was testimony that the soil in what we shall designate as the “permit area” consists of quite a range in sizes of soil particles from large rocks down to some fine silt. It is not uniform either in the vertical horizon or laterally. It has been laid down by rather fast-moving water, and as the streams have changed directions and changed velocities they have deposited in a rather heterogeneous manner various particles in rather close areas, so that there is no one property that has a uniform type of soil. It is what is termed gravelly soil. In some places there are soils having a sufficiently fine deposit to be termed a sandy loam. There are some small parcels or portions that could be called gravelly loam, but, for the most part it is a gravelly soil; that "The permit area is cut up by stream beds. It is badly eroded by what we term flood erosion due to the surface flows following flash floods, so that there are many small depressions due to that. The difference in elevation will vary two or three feet in very short distances in many places, in some places the depth of these washes and depressions is as much as five or six feet; there are one or two pronounced ridges, and the topography is so uneven that at the present time no agricultural work could be carried on without levelling. If it were to be laid out for an irrigation system in which pipelines are used and the furrow method is employed, it would be necessary to do very extensive, a very extensive amount of grading.

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Bluebook (online)
203 P.2d 37, 90 Cal. App. 2d 348, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-gregg-calctapp-1949.